RESUMO
The compatibility of perovskite and organic photovoltaic materials in solution processing provides a significant advantage in the fabrication of high-efficiency perovskite/organic tandem solar cells. However, additional recombination losses can occur during exciton dissociation in organic materials, leading to energy losses in the near-infrared region of tandem devices. Consequently, a ternary organic rear subcell is designed containing two narrow-bandgap non-fullerene acceptors to enhance the absorption of near-infrared light. Simultaneously, a unique diffusion-controlled growth technique is adopted to optimize the morphology of the ternary active layer, thereby improving exciton dissociation efficiency. This innovation not only broadens the absorption range of near-infrared light but also facilitates the generation and effective dissociation of excitons. Owing to these technological improvements, the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of organic solar cells increased to 19.2%. Furthermore, a wide-bandgap perovskite front subcell is integrated with a narrow-bandgap organic rear subcell to develop a perovskite/organic tandem solar cell. Owing to the reduction in near-infrared energy loss, the PCE of this tandem device significantly improved, reaching 24.5%.
RESUMO
Blade-coating stands out as an alternative for fabricating scalable perovskite solar cells. However, it demands special control of the precursor composition regarding nucleation and crystallization and currently exhibits lower performance than the spin-coating process. It is mainly the resulting film morphology and excess lead iodide (PbI2) distribution that influences the optoelectronic properties. Here, the effectiveness of introducing N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) to regulate the structure of the perovskite layer and the redistribution of PbI2 is found. The introduction of NMP leads to the accumulation of excess PbI2, mainly on the top surface, reducing residual PbI2 at the perovskite buried interface. This not only facilitates the passivation of perovskite grain boundaries but also eliminates the potential degradation of the PbI2 triggered by light illumination in the perovskite buried interface. The optimized NMP-modified inverted perovskite solar cell achieves a champion efficiency of 24.5%, among the highest reported blade-coated perovskite solar cells. Furthermore, 13.68 cm2 blading perovskite solar modules are fabricated and demonstrate an efficiency of up to 20.4%. These findings underscore that with proper modulation of precursor composition, blade-coating can be a feasible and superior alternative for manufacturing high-quality perovskite films, paving the way for their large-scale applications in photovoltaic technology.
RESUMO
The quality of two-step processed perovskites is significantly influenced by the distribution of organic amine salts. Especially, modulating the distribution of organic amine salts remains a grand challenge for sequential vapor-deposited perovskites due to the blocking effect of bottom compact PbI2. Herein, an ultrahigh humidity treatment strategy is developed to facilitate the diffusion of formamidinium iodide (FAI) from the top surface to the buried bottom interface on the sequential vapor-deposited bilayer structure. Both experimental and theoretical investigations elucidate the mechanism that moisture helps to i) create FAI diffusion channels by inducing a phase transition from α- to δ-phase in the perovskite, and ii) enhance the diffusivity of FAI by forming hydrogen bonds. This ultrahigh humidity treatment strategy enables the formation of a desired homogeneous and high-quality α-phase after annealing. As a result, a champion efficiency of 22.0% is achieved and 97.5% of its initial performance is maintained after aging for 1050 h under ambient air with a relative humidity of up to 80%. This FAI diffusion strategy provides new insights into the reproducible, scalable, and high-performance sequential vapor-deposited perovskite solar cells.
RESUMO
Stability and scalability are essential and urgent requirements for the commercialization of perovskite solar cells (PSCs), which are retarded by the non-ideal interface leading to non-radiative recombination and degradation. Extensive efforts are devoted to reducing the defects at the perovskite surface. However, the effects of the buried interface on the degradation and non-radiative recombination need to be further investigated. Herein, an omnibearing strategy to modify buried and top surfaces of perovskite film to reduce interfacial defects, by incorporating aluminum oxide (Al2 O3 ) as a dielectric layer and growth scaffolds (buried surface) and phenethylammonium bromide as a passivation layer (buried and top surfaces), is demonstrated. Consequently, the open-circuit voltage is extensively boosted from 1.02 to 1.14 V with the incorporation of Al2 O3 filling the voids between grains, resulting in dense morphology of buried interface and reduced recombination centers. Finally, the impressive efficiencies of 23.1% (0.1 cm2 ) and 22.4% (1 cm2 ) are achieved with superior stability, which remain 96% (0.1 cm2 ) and 89% (1 cm2 ) of its initial performance after 1200 (0.1 cm2 ) and 2500 h (1 cm2 ) illumination, respectively. The dual modification provides a universal method to reduce interfacial defects, revealing a promising prospect in developing high-performance PSCs and modules.
RESUMO
A scalable and low-cost deposition of high-quality charge transport layers and photoactive perovskite layers are the grand challenges for large-area and efficient perovskite solar modules and tandem cells. An inverted structure with an inorganic hole transport layer is expected for long-term stability. Among various hole transport materials, nickel oxide has been investigated for highly efficient and stable perovskite solar cells. However, the reported deposition methods are either difficult for large-scale conformal deposition or require a high vacuum process. Chemical bath deposition is supposed to realize a uniform, conformal, and scalable coating by a solution process. However, the conventional chemical bath deposition requires a high annealing temperature of over 400 °C. In this work, an amino-alcohol ligand-based controllable release and deposition of NiOX using chemical bath deposition with a low calcining temperature of 270 °C is developed. The uniform and conformal in-situ growth precursive films can be adjusted by tuning the ligand structure. The inverted structured perovskite solar cells and large-area solar modules reached a champion PCE of 22.03% and 19.03%, respectively. This study paves an efficient, low-temperature, and scalable chemical bath deposition route for large-area NiOX thin films for the scalable fabrication of highly efficient perovskite solar modules.